Christena is beloved by students and readers around the world for her candid, courageous telling of her story and the discovery of her own truth.
“The Black Madonna chose well when she picked Christena Cleveland to tell her story,” says theologian Matthew Fox. “Thanks to Christena, the Black Madonna stands up and sings anew... and comes to life.”
When you join us, you’ll also be among the first to hear about Christena’s new 7-week course where you’ll discover and experience the Black Madonna as the miracle worker She’s always been, transforming your beliefs about yourself and others along the way.
During the course, Christena will guide you through embodied and somatic practices, including guided meditations, singing, movement practices, play, and more. You’ll explore the interspiritual history and meaning of the Black Madonna and why She urgently matters in our contemporary world.
What People Are Saying About Dr. Christena Cleveland...
“Amazing! Liberation for BIPOC and White people who get that there's more freedom beyond the effects of white supremacy. Christena shares timely wisdom and care as she dismantles the effects of racism from our spirit, soul, and body, just when it seems so prevailing and never-ending. There's a place for freedom and abundance beyond what we've been led to believe. — J.B.
About Dr. Christena Cleveland
Christena Cleveland, PhD, is a social psychologist, public theologian, author, and activist. She is the founder and director of the Center for Justice + Renewal and its sister organization, Sacred Folk, which creates resources to stimulate people’s spiritual imaginations and support their journeys toward liberation. A weaver of Black liberation and the Sacred Feminine, Dr. Cleveland integrates psychology, theology, storytelling, and art to stimulate our spiritual imaginations.
She recently completed her third full-length book, God is a Black Woman, which details her 400-mile walking pilgrimage across central France in search of ancient Black Madonna statues, and examines the relationship among race, gender, and cultural perceptions of the Divine.
Christena holds a PhD in social psychology from the University of California Santa Barbara as well as an honorary doctorate from the Virginia Theological Seminary. An award-winning researcher and author, Christena is a Ford Foundation Fellow who has held faculty positions at several institutions of higher education — most recently at Duke University’s Divinity School, where she led a research team investigating self-compassion as a buffer to racial stress.
Though Christena loves scholarly inquiry, she is also a student of embodied wisdom. She recently completed the Art & Social Change intensive body wisdom training for millennial leaders, and is currently deepening her mind-body-spirit integration in a year-long embodied leadership cohort for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.